Charles is awesssomeee. Best for Flash but this works too.
Best,
--
Edward H. Hotchkiss
http://www.edwardhotchkiss.com/
http://www.twitter.com/edwardhotchkiss/
--
On Nov 17, 2010, at 4:21 PM, Abraham Williams wrote:
John,
It still works for me. My two suggestions i
On 18/11/10 8:21 AM, Abraham Williams wrote:
It still works for me. My two suggestions is to make sure you are
issuing a POST request to oauth/access_token and check that
oauth_bridge_code is getting passed correctly.
Definitely a post, and the bridge code seems to be correct as well.
I've tried
John,
It still works for me. My two suggestions is to make sure you are issuing a
POST request to oauth/access_token and check that oauth_bridge_code is
getting passed correctly.
You could use a tool like Charles Proxy to verify this information.
http://www.charlesproxy.com/
Abraham
On 6/10/10 7:17 AM, Abraham Williams wrote:
The functionality is there just not officially supported.
http://blog.abrah.am/2010/09/using-twitter-anywhere-bridge-codes.html
I've had a go at implementing this with ruby & jnunemaker's twitter gem
(https://github.com/jnunemaker/twitter), but to no
The functionality is there just not officially supported.
http://blog.abrah.am/2010/09/using-twitter-anywhere-bridge-codes.html
Abraham
-
Abraham Williams | Hacker Advocate | http://abrah.am
Update: http://blog.abrah.am/2010/10/organizing-my-life.html
@abraham | http://projects.abrah.
I've been reading that it is planned, but is it ever going to happen?
Facebook does hits, Google Friend Connect does this (subsequently
provides Twitter login as well through their API), so why can't
twitters own API? Just pass a authorized key and secret with the
cookie so we can through it throug